A Synopsis: Legal Logic
A Synopsis: Legal Logic
A Synopsis: Legal Logic
Many whose names are well known to lawyers have their own view on it,
such as but not limited to:
Holmes with his grammatic slogan which provides that, “The life of the
law has not been logic; it has been experience.” Holmes, however, did not mean
to minimize the importance of rational thinking in the law, but, quite on the
contrary, to urge a more conscious and rational recognition of the ground of
judicial decision. He later elucidated on what he dubbed “the fallacy of logical
form” which refers to the notion that the only force at work in the development
of the law is logic. That the postulate about the universe is that there is a fixed
quantitative relation between every phenomenon and its antecedents and
consequents;
Moris Cohen added few points on Holmes’ concept and pointed out that
the case method is merely a pedagogical devise and is not an adaptation of
inductive scientific logic to legal problems. The law at any given time is
administered by men who cannot help taking for granted many of the prevalent
ideas and attitudes of the community. But an undue reliance upon traditional
logic leads to a failure to distinguish between logical division and natural
classification. The courts are forced to recognize the existence of natural
classes, but they tend to regard them as absolute logical divisions. Thus they
fail to realize the difference between the useful approximation, which is the
natural classification of an empirical science, and the absolutely accurate
distinction which exists between the classes of a theoretical logic. Logic has
great utility in the law in helping to analyze and classify legal material; but the
raw material must come from a study of social needs. And the application of
logic must be tempered by a recognition of the need for judicial discretion in
dealing with the atypical cases. The judge should be neither a logical
automaton nor a puppet of psychological impulses, but should have logically
and scientifically trained feelings.
First, is the line of logical progression, which he calls the rule of analogy
or the method of philosophy;
Fourth is the line of justice, morals and social welfare, the mores of the
day, or the method of sociology.
Walter Wheeler Cook replies that the disclaimer filed on behalf of logic
ignores the fact that lawyers and logicians have long claimed logic to be in
some manner the science of correct thought. If the formal academic study of
law is truly a purely formal discipline, then it is not law but simply a
generalized branch of mathematics. We shall make the most progress in our
thinking if we keep in mind that deductive logic is not a method of proof, but
simply the most compendious and economic method of dealing with a
multiplicity of facts yet developed. But its use is possible only when a high
degree of precision has been attained and the interrelation of different classes
are well understood. The conclusion, clearly implied, is that these conditions
not yet having been reached in the law, deductive logic is not usefully
applicable.
Becker pointed out that both the traditional method of legal reasoning by
seeking to bring the facts of a case within the general statement of some legal
principle, and the method of reasoning by analogy, in which cases are related
on the basis of facts without express formulation of a principle, necessarily
involve the omission from consideration of some of the facts. Such an omission
implies a judgment as to relevance, which, in turn, must be based upon a
moral or ethical principle or preference. Thus both methods of legal reasoning
involve moral assumptions inherent in their classifications but not explicit in
their formulation. Ultimately the questions as to whether or not the body of
past cases permits significant generalizations and whether or not future
judicial decisions are predictable cannot be decided by argument about
philosophical theories, but must depend upon experiment and sound
scholarship. The difficulty with the theories of legal philosophy and logic to
date has been their failure to present a methodology capable of application to
the analysis and decision of the daily grist of problems.
Stone, in a brilliant critical essay, remarks that English courts since
medieval times -have legislated under the pretence of lcgical deduction from
existing legal principles. In effect, he says that the legal categories in common
use are either meaningless, multiple or indeterminate in reference, overlapping
and duplicitous in reference, or circular. However, the consideration of
precedents does tend to direct the judicial attention to the conditions of
problems and present a rapid if incomplete review of social contexts. But the
failure of judges to, recognize their own logical freedom may cause them to
ignore important social considerations.
Based upon the analogy of field theory in physics and the operation of
judicial logic has recently been advanced by Felix Cohen. He suggests that as
the forces of physical energy are deflected when passing through an
electromagnetic field, so the lines of judicial reasoning will undergo a shift
when they enter a neighborhood of high value tensions or feelings.
(1) The judge (lawyer or administrator, as the case may be) must
determine the point of conflict and the problem or issues involved;
(2) Having discovered the issues or points of conflict, the judge must
decide on the area of relevance;
(3) Having defined the issues and the areas of relevance as to each, the
judge and lawyers must then select the evidence tending to establish the facts
relevant to each issue, and the judge must select from among conflicting bits of
evidence those to which he will give probative value and must determine the
relative probative values to be assigned to the various items of evidence;
(4) Having thus postulated the relevant facts, the judge must then select
some standard of decision;
(5) Having selected a standard of decision, the judge must still analyze
the controlling considerations implicit in the standard selected;
(6) Finally, the judge will reach the actual decision of the case by
applying the principle thus arrived at to the facts thus determined.
The greatest impediment to the use of modem logic in fields such as law
is that it does not come in ready made forms which need be decked out only
with a few appropriate terms in order to begin full scale functioning in a fresh
field. The forms of modern logic are, by and large, developed in connection with
specific subject matter, and most of the work of adaptation to the legal process
remains to be done. As a modest (and very incomplete) beginning, it is
suggested that the following principles of modern logic are already struggling
for recognition in contemporary legal thinking and will necessarily form the
basic rules of a modern legal logic.
(4) The multiplicity of alternative inferences from any given data should
be recognized and considered. (Things are much more frequently some shade of
gray than they are black or white).